What I Know By Heart

Last week, the first Tuesday in April, after 31 days of writing in March, and I wasn’t ready to write. Right at the end of March, I was called in to be a substitute teacher in fourth grade for two weeks. I’ve had to heavily support other classrooms this year due to staffing issues. This classroom didn’t just need coverage, it needed rebuilding. The students needed to come back together as a community and relearn what it means to be a student.

It was hard. The kind of hard that makes you question everything you thought you knew. I was trained in the Responsive Classroom approach, grounded in the belief that relationships and community come first. But that first week shook me. I found myself wondering: Are classrooms different now? Are kids different now? Or am I missing something?

But I kept at it, holding high expectations, emphasizing routines, and trying to impact this students to want to be at school and put their best foot forward. Most mornings, I woke up and considered calling in sick. There were tears. There were moments I felt completely defeated. And there were colleagues who showed up-checking in, stepping in, reminding me I wasn’t alone.

As I got to know the students, I started to look more closely at the behaviors that frustrated me most, especially the apathy. Students gave up quickly when the reading felt heavy, when math required just a bit more thinking, or when expectations demanded even a small stretch.

So I went back to what I know by heart. Were their basic needs being met? Did they feel like they belonged? Did they feel significant? Were they experiencing any fun and joy?

For some, I began to realize, school simply felt hard.

There was one student in particular who challenged me more than the rest. Instead of pulling away, I leaned in. I began checking in with him during math, encouraging him to ask for help when he was stuck rather than wandering or acting out. I nudged him toward harder problems. I asked him to draw what he did know so he could begin to figure out what he didn’t. And when he pushed through, even just a little, I named it. “That feels good, doesn’t it?” I’d say, hoping he could feel the power in that moment.

On Friday, my last day before spring break, he raised his hand during math. I walked over, bracing myself for the usual deflection or distraction. Instead, he looked up and said, “Can you help me with this problem?”

I wanted to hug him. Instead, I smiled. “I’d be happy to.” I pulled up a chair beside him and looked at the work he had already started. And just like that, everything felt different.

I left those two weeks with more tear-free days, a little more steadiness, and a quiet but powerful reminder: knowing our students changes everything. It’s how community is built.

And it is still, absolutely, paramount.

8 thoughts on “What I Know By Heart

  1. Bravo!! I just may print this and hang it on my bulletin board as a reminder to me. I’m not alone when a class is hard. And building relationships IS the key. You should submit this to an education magazine. All teachers need to be reminded of what you map out here. Thanks for writing it all down today. I needed it!

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  2. Yes! I think figuring out the root of the apathy was the key, and you stayed with them to figure that out. I think it’s so easy for us as teachers to “write off” a class as a bad mix or a bad class. It’s hard not to get discouraged or (out of a sense of self-preservation) to adopt a stance of “I can’t let this bother me.” Kudos to you for letting it bother you and then looking for the underlying issues. I hope they turned a corner.

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  3. Jessica,

    Good for you for persevering and building relationships.

    Thanks for being vulnerable and sharing your struggles and doubts as well as that sweet victory of the boy asking for help with his math problem.

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  4. Jessica, you write about that part of teaching that you cannot learn from any book. It involves building the learner’s confidence and motivation and even desire to advocate and find and do…..sigh…..I try VERY hard to model it to my grad school teachers and sometimes, not all the time, they notice. I once tried to explain to a superintendent that sitting on the floor reading with a struggling first grader is sometimes necessary because they are grounded and safe that way. I won’t share his comment on my observation. You would have the same comment; yet you and I reached out students where they were at that moment. KUDOS to you

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  5. This is a powerful reminder not only of a strategy that works, but also just how long it can take for you to see results. Building community is one of the reasons my favorite place to sub is the school where I retired from, because I know so many students and staff.

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